Author:
SOTIROPOULOS FOTIS,VENTIKOS YIANNIS
Abstract
In a recent experimental study, Spohn, Mory & Hopfinger (1998) investigated in
detail the flow in a closed cylindrical container with a rotating bottom for Reynolds
numbers in the steady and unsteady regimes. Their visualization photographs revealed
that the stationary vortex breakdown bubbles, which form along the container axis
within a range of governing parameters, are open, with inflow and outflow, and
asymmetric at their downstream end. For Reynolds numbers within the unsteady
regime, visualizations of the limiting streamlines on the cylindrical wall showed that
the Stewartson layer separates asymmetrically along stationary spiral convergence
lines that form below the top cover. We study numerically the container flow, by
solving the unsteady, three-dimensional Navier–Stokes equations, in order to clarify
the origin and elucidate the underlying physics of these complex, three-dimensional
flow features. The stationary vortex breakdown bubbles we simulate exhibit all the
asymmetries observed in the laboratory. By analysing the Lagrangian characteristics
of the calculated flow fields, we explain the origin of these asymmetries, clarify the
experimentally documented filling and emptying mechanisms, and show that the
flow in the interior of stationary vortex breakdown bubbles exhibits chaotic particle
paths. We also show that the spiral separation lines observed by Spohn et al. (1998)
inside the Stewartson layer at high Reynolds numbers are due to the growth of
pairs of counter-rotating, spiral vortices and the interaction of these vortices with the
stationary-cover boundary layer.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
79 articles.
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